Graphics Cards Guide

A Quick Chat with NVIDIA's CEO

A Quick Chat with NVIDIA's CEO

Jen-Hsun Huang, CEO and Co-founder of NVIDIA corporation is quite unlike most other CEOs one would ever meet. As enthusiastic as ever with a pragmatic and positive mindset, he openly shared that he uses his most basic of instincts and skills formed in his youth to guide him as he manages his huge company with difficult decisions to make on a daily basis. We guess he's got great survivor instincts and willpower that has seen him through thus far and should serve him well even when moving forward.

After a quick group chat with the Asia-Pacific Editors, we've compiled the key findings and his thoughts in an easy to digest manner:-

Evolution of Games in the near-term

All new games would end up supporting some form of physics simulation by some time in 2010.

A lot of what's been showcased in the conference here has been revolving around physics processing or its related aspects.

You've seen what PhysX can do for your game immersion and more games are steadily supporting this as new titles are released. Fast forward a year later and think about games without some form physics processing element - that sure sounds like a bland looking game.

What about Ray-Tracing in Games?

Ray tracing may come in the further future, but not probably anytime soon. While it's easier to manage, it is far more computationally intensive. Plus, there isn't anyone pursuing this at the moment.

Ray-tracing improves on visual quality, but it doesn't help with regards to immersive gaming where interactions with objects and environments provide the added level of realism and user involvement.

For these reasons, physics simulation will come to games first as it has already made its mark and is a growing pool.

Consumer applications where GPU computing will aid most in the coming years

Games

Imaging tools (Adobe and NVIDIA are collaborating tightly in this space and more will be revealed later).

Video processing

Image and character recognition to enable new forms of data management

Tegra will be a part of the GP-GPU Computing initiative

The development of the Tegra chip took some US$500 million.

Its purpose is to fill a void for very low power multimedia computing needs in the form factors for mobile phones, PMPs, netbooks, notebooks and in many other forms of compact computing needs without the need to run x86 software.

It supports CUDA as well, thus GP-GPU computing; but on lower PTX (parallel thread execution engine) standards that can be manipulated as a profile. This is where the NVIDIA Nexus development environment comes in.

Why the Fermi architecture coming out late won't matter to NVIDIA

Its design priorities were that it must be a great GPU first and foremost; there's no reason to release a new GPU that doesn't offer a phenomenal advantage over the best of the current generation.

Secondly, it must be pushed out as soon as possible, but this priority is secondary to the first one, in which it must be a great GPU.

As such, it doesn't matter if NVIDIA misses out the December buying season.

The PC market segmentation going forward as envisioned by Jen-Hsun

It will be split in three distinct categories.

The first would target professionals and high-end content creators who probably tax the GPU far more than their CPUs.

The second group would be high-end end-users who have very specific requirements and needs out of their PC. They are likely to use a balance of the CPU and GPU for their tasks.

The third groups would be the mainstream users, who would eventually turn to cloud computing services and devices or systems that will enable internet access as they wouldn't have any specific needs; if they did, they would already have bought a reasonably spec'ed system.

The traditional PC as we know it will go become a highly commoditized item, just they like how DVD players are. They are indispensible but are extremely cheap that they become part of a service bundle - just like phones and netbooks being given away for a subscription.

This is why NVIDIA is investing in Tegra for mobility and compact devices as well as the Quadro and Tesla series for workstation and HPC needs as the Cloud will eventually serve the needs of the mainstream users and they need not require powerful compute devices with them.

Discrete graphics will still be around, but it would probably not play as big a role to consumers as it would to corporations building services. Think about the recent beta launch of the OnLive service trials where powerful PC games like Crysis can be run off the computing cloud and the game itself can be played fluently on a low-level PC system or even on your TV.

The face of personal computing is set for a change indeed for the mainstream users.

Any amount of compute power is never enough

When programmable shaders were introduced in 2001, it was unheard of. It was even seen as a overkill back then. But within a couple of years, the entire industry was on to it as more were enlightened of its capabilities

So by next year, you can expect all GPUs to handle physics processing.

In 5 years time, expect the stuff you see in movies like those explosions and cool rendering effects to be made available in games.

Already folks like LucasArts are using the same development tools as their Lucasfilm counterparts are using and this means accelerated game and movie development. This further enforces the fact that the movie-level of realism is certainly within reach given a few more years when processing power would have leaped much more to enable this.